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Sincere thanks to everyone who participated! No matter how you've participated, thank you! Cheering on fellow QAL-ers, sharing your palettes, sharing pics, and sewing along with us, well it was all amazing!

Today's my day on the Bequest Maker's Tour. It's only day 2 of 10, and I'm over the moon with the project sneak peeks we've seen. I'm looking forward to the upcoming days!

It has been so fun to watch all these inspiring makers receive their fabric, and start cutting into it! My favourite part of this whole creative process is seeing what other creatives make with our fabric. We've also just released our Lookbook that's full of creative ways to use our fabric.

Today, I thought I'd share something that has become my tradition in our fabric design process. As soon as our fabric arrives, I take a few prints from the collection, an embroidery hoop, gather some silk ribbon, Aurifil's cotton floss, and my little tin of pearls, and sit and stitch.

When I was studying Costuming at Dalhousie, there was a book in the university library that was called Embroidery of the 18th Century (or the name was something like that, it was 20 years ago). The old red book had previously lost its dust cover, and weighed a ton, but I carted it around for those opportunities I had a moment to look through the pages. It was my Pinterest circa 1999. I poured over that book again and again, learning stitches, searching for inspiration, and looking in wide eyed amazement over the coverlets, gowns, and shoes covered in embroidery. Ohhhh the late fees I paid on that book.

So, when it came to time to make my final project gown. You can bet it had embroidery! Cuffs and bodice were embroidered in silk thread and silk ribbon, using stitches that were common in the 18th century, and still are among the most common embroidery stitches today.

So back to Bequest! Cav’s artwork always brightens my mood! I wish I could paint like that. I love watching her carefully painted watercolour turn into art on fabric.

My friend Meaghan studied Art at NSCAD in Halifax, and she once was assigned to select a Master's painting and replicate it. She had to think about the colours they used, and mixed; the brushstrokes, and their direction as they moved across the canvas; the colours on the brush for every stroke. It made her see the original painting in a way she hadn't before, and taught her much.

Embroidering is about as painterly as I get, so it's been special with June's Cottage, and now with Bequest to work with the art on fabric in this way.

Shared in our Lookbook is this hoop before it was finished, and also another hoop that I embroidered. Go check it out!

We have AMAZING creatives as part of our Maker's Tour, we hope you'll follow along each day, and look out for a Follow Loop Giveaway happening on Instagram at 4pm on November 23rd. The Giveaway loot is awesome!

Here's the calendar for our Maker's Tour, and links to their creations will be added here as they become available.

We've made it to the final week of our QAL! Assembling your quilt top week. Thanks so much for joining in, and encouraging each other!

I haven't shared many pics of my quilt, mostly due to this: since the design wall played a big part in colour placement in the quilt, and my sewing room is in our basement, it's tough getting a good pic. My quilt top is ready for the Longarmer's this week!

I have to admit, I was curious (read: nervous) how this would turn out. Making an ombre from pink to white to teals to dark greens to black, I was worried if it would look broken up and there would be no flow, but wow! Somehow it turned out! I think the colours bleed into each other well. Phew! I'm so relieved that gamble turned out better than expected!

I've got the backing pieced, using my favourite Invisible Pieced Backing tutorial, and I've decided to bind with either a pastel teal or the leftover low volume neutrals. I'll get the binding made this week.

So, onto the good stuff! Here's a review of how the giveaway will go:

We have four prizes from four great sponsors! Winners will be randomly chosen from those who have posted a finished quilt top by midnight on the last day of Week 8, which is Sunday November 18th. Winners will be announced on Nov 19th.

2. We need to see an IG post with your finished Quilt Top by midnight Nov 18th to be entered in the draw for the giveaways. If you don't have Instagram, please email me briarhilldesigns@gmail.com and put in the subject line, "PWQAL Giveaway entry."

3. If you'd like to use a pattern that will use up those awkward leftover curved pieces, use the coupon code QALTREAT for 40% off select patterns from my Etsy shop. That's the best discount I've ever offered. Coupon code is exclusive to QAL subscribers, and to three patterns: Glimmering, Best Dressed, and Hearth (available at the end of the QAL). Coupon code is valid until Nov 30th.

I'm seeing amazing finishes all the time on my IG feed! Way to go friends!

We're at WEEK 7! This Quilt Along has been flying by for me. Has it flown by for you, too?

This is our last week of sewing blocks, so finish 'em up!!! Week 8 will be all about assembling our quilt tops!

Oh my goodness guys! I'm loving your work! Thanks so much for quilting along with me! As an update on my quilt, well it's looking great!

Since I wanted to do an Ombre layout, I cut and sewed all the curves, then pinned them to my design board to plan the layout. I spent Easy Week sewing the blocks together. It looks prettier than I imagined it would. Don't ya love when that happens?

All planned out!

The blocks are now almost all assembled, and layout is finalized.

The time has come to share the final Giveaways! We have four prizes! Winners will be randomly chosen from those who have posted a finished quilt top by midnight on the last day of Week 8, which is Sunday November 18th. Winners will be announced on Nov 19th.

Here are the prizes from our great giveaway sponsors:

Jaymi Horne especially loves Foundation Paper Piecing because she says she has very little patience and doesn't like pre-cutting. I totally get that! Sometimes we all just want to get to the sewing! Jaymi has over 50 patterns and many more in the works! Take a look at her FPP tutorial on her “quick and dirty” method.

The Winner will win their choice of 6 patterns from her shop! We'll notify Jaymi of the winner's selections, and she will send you the digital files of the patterns.

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This is Bobbie from the Geeky Bobbin If you haven't already seen her longarm quilting, fussy cutting tutorials, and her fun Retro Tetro pattern (it's on display at Quilt Market!), be sure to check her out! The Moonrise Quilt is the first pattern in Geeky Bobbin's Lakeside Reflections Series. This geometric, modern landscape quilt plays with subtle changes in colour value and basic shapes at different scales to add texture and movement. This pattern includes tips for piecing curves, so even a confident beginner can successfully make a striking wall hanging or throw quilt.

Bobbie offered to do a rendering of her new pattern in Bequest! I love it!

The winner will receive a digital copy of The Moonrise Quilt, her next pattern coming out later this month. If you want it the second it's available, Bobbie has started a preorder for the pattern.

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Andrea Tsang Jackson is a textile artist, quilt pattern designer and teacher based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. As a designer and an educator, she wants to inspire others to reach their own creative potential and to see themselves as designers of their own lives. Although her favourite colours to wear and design with are neutral, she loves to play with colour in her 3rd Story Workshop.

RJR is celebrating its 40th anniversary this Fall, and as you probably know, Caverly and I are textile designers with them. They're happy to sponsor our Grand Prize- a bundle of their new Cotton and Steel Basics! They don't even ship out until the new year, but one of you will be getting them early!

I'm in love with these basics already. I've been playing with the digital files for months, because I designed some new quilt patterns for the new C+S lines, Kibori, by Chiemi Fujita and Wildwood by Rifle Paper Co. Both quilts use some basics. I haven't gotten to sew with the basics yet though, because the sample yardage just barely arrived before Quilt Market, so these were pieced at RJR, and they'll be shipping fabric to me as soon as they're back from Market so I can remake these for the pattern covers!

Meet Starstrung:

Here's Yonder:

So, you have one day short of two weeks to show us your finished quilt top! You can do it! Think of how great it will feel to sew that last row, hold it up, and admire your handiwork!